ActivePaper Archive FLOODING FORCES EVENT CANCELLATIONS - Chattanooga, 9/28/2018

FLOODING FORCES EVENT CANCELLATIONS

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STAFF PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND

Luther Summers with the Hamilton County Highway Department sets up a fence at the site of the Hamilton County Fair at Chester Frost Park on Thursday. The fair has been canceled because of unsafe conditions caused by heavy rains and flooding.

The annual Hamilton County Fair scheduled for this weekend has been called off because of the weather, county Mayor Jim Coppinger said.

The county parks and recreation staff said parking lots are flooded, and the ground is so saturated from several inches of rain that holding the event would be a safety hazard.

The decision was made Thursday to give vendors as much notice as possible, Coppinger said.

“They lose money and we lose money” by delaying the announcement, he said.

In an emailed statement, county spokesman Mike Dunne added, “We hope you will join us next year for the 30th anniversary of the Hamilton County Fair.”

Also Thursday, it was announced that the world’s most famous triathlon will be a two-discipline event in Chattanooga this weekend as race officials announced they are canceling the swim portion of Ironman.

The 144.6-mile swim, bike and run is now 142.2 miles of cycling and running. However, race organizers still consider the race an official Ironman event and finishers will be considered an Ironman, according to an event spokesman. Strong rain elevated water levels throughout the region, killing one woman and causing damage. Tennessee Valley Authority personnel kept Ironman officials updated on water flow and conditions but were focused on controlling the flooding in the region. Ultimately, the decision was up to Ironman officials who determined it would not be safe to have competitors in the water.

“Ironman has strict swim safety benchmarks in place that have been surpassed, including the rate of water flow and water quality,” according to an Ironman statement. “There has been a three-foot increase in water levels due to the opening of flood gates upstream, and the opening of a spillway outside of Chattanooga, generating additional flow with a rate three times higher than the limit deemed safe for swimming in the Tennessee River.”

Water quality readings for E. coli came back more than 20 times higher than safe levels for swimming, according to the statement, and a considerable amount of debris was floating through the water.

The race will begin with a time trial bike start at 8 a.m. Competitors have 8 hours and 10 minutes per athlete to finish the bike leg with a 12:40 a.m. final cutoff for the full race, according to Ironman Senior Regional Director Keats McGonigal. The bike course will remain the same, but part of the run course is underwater and will be slightly changed. It will still be 26.2 miles. Officials are still working on the exact route. All qualifying slots will still be awarded.

“It’s still going to be a fun weekend. We’ll still have plenty of fun things to do,” Chattanooga Sports Committee President Tim Morgan said. “Unfortunately due to the environmental conditions Mother Nature has presented, Ironman had to make a decision based on the safety of the athletes and spectators, and they made the right decision.”

Total release from Chickamauga Dam — located up-stream from the planned Ironman swim — is considerably higher than usual, according to TVA. Seven of nine dams on the Tennessee River are at maximum turbine capacity and spilling, and part of the run course is underwater.

For many of the more than 3,000 competitors, it’s devastating news.

“I understand that they’re making the right decision for the safety of athletes,” competitor Wesley Donehue said. “But when you put this many months of training in, it’s pretty devastating. I’m going to go, but I’m not going to consider myself an Ironman after this.”

Donehue traveled from Charleston, South Carolina, with his pregnant wife and two children for the race. It’s his first Ironman event, and he had to teach himself to swim in order to compete.

He will look for another Ironman in the coming weeks. His body has peaked, he said, and he won’t have time to dedicate months to training again if he doesn’t race soon because of his growing family.

“The hardest thing is the training,” he said. ” For me, this is it. Either I do it now or have to wait another 10 years or so.”